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PALEORIENT, vol. 17/2 - 1991 ORNAMENT STYLES OF THE INDUS VALLEY TRADITION: EVIDENCE FROM RECENT EXCAVATIONS AT HARAPPA, PAKISTAN J.M. KENOYER ABSTRACT. - Recent excavations at Harappa and Mehrgarh, as well as other sites in Pakistan and India have provided new opportunities to study the ornaments of the Indus Civilization. A brief discussion of the methodologies needed for the study of Indus ornaments is presented along with examples of how Indus artisans combined precious metals, stone beads, shell and faience to form elaborate ornaments. Many of these ornament styles were also copied in more easily obtained materials such as steatite or terra-cotta. The social and ritual implications of specific ornaments are' examined through their archaeological context and ... comparisons with the function of specific ornaments are recorded in the ancient texts and folk traditions of South Asia. RESUME. - Les fouilles recentes effectuees a Harappa, a Mehrgarh, et sur d'autres sites au Pakistan et en Inde offrent des possibilites nouvelles pour l'etude des parures de la Civilisation de I'Indus. Les methodes utilisees pour l'etude des parures de la tradition Indus sont presentees et commentees rapidement, ainsi que Ie sont quelques exemples de parures specijiques, produit elabore du travail des artisans de l'Indus qui allient les materiaux precieux, la pierre, les coquillages et la fai'ence. On copiait aussi ces parures dans des materiaux d'obtention plus facile tels que la steatite ou la terre cuite. Grtice au contexte archeologique, mais aussi a des comparaisons avec la fonction de parures specijiques decrites dans les textes anciens et les traditions populaires de l'Asie du sud, sont erudiees aussi les implications sociales et rituelles de parures specijiques. INTRODUCTION are 'no longer accessible due to the vagaries of time. Fortunately, new opportunities to study Indus orna:'" ments are being provided through recent excavations The role of ornaments in prehistoric soci~ty has at sites in Pakistan (3) and India (4). not been given the attention it deserves and very These new opportunities allow for the careful little work has been done on the ornament styles assessment of the technology and raw materials, as' worn by the peoples of the Indus Valley Tradition. well as the archaeological contexts in which orna­ Although numerous ornaments have been collected ments are found. Through careful recording of ex­ from excavations at major Indus sites (fig. 1), the cavations in the cemeteries at Harappa and publications do little more than list them along with Mehrgarh, it is now possible to determine 'specific miscellaneous small finds. This situation is surpris­ ways in which certain ornaments were constructed ing when one considers that ornaments are tradition­ and worn. This information can now be correlated ally used as an outward symbol of a person's age, with the ornament styles seen on figurines and seal social status, ethnic identity and even religious af­ carvings. filiation. While the earlier excavators were definitely interested in understanding these aspects of ancient Even more important is the study of the different Indus society, their immediate goals and methodolo­ techniques by which raw materials were proc'essed gies overlooked the types of information that a con­ to produce specific types of ornaments. The ancient textual study of ornament could provide. artisans used both natural and highly processed materials often combining different materials to form Two major exceptions to this attitude are seen in elaborate ornaments. the systematic study of beads by H. Beck (1) and the careful collection and recording of ornaments Although there are no written texts of the Indus and manufacturing waste done by Ernest Mackay at period to tell us the value or meaning of specific Mohenjo-daro and Chanhu-daro (2). However, ornaments we can make some general inferences on Beck's nomenclature and terminologies were not in­ the basis of problem oriented ethnoarchaeological tended to remain unchanged and need drastic revi­ studies. For example, detailed research on traditional sions' while most of Mackay's notes and collections stone bead manufacture can provide valuable ~dels (1) BECK, 1973. (3) DALES and KENOYER, 1990; JARRIGE, 1986. (2) MACKAY, 1938, 1943; MARSHALL, 1931. (4) BISHT, 1987, 1989; HEDGE et al., 1988.' 79 ,...'-......,.,.o:-'"":..~·""{---"~".,...'7""'"I-_·...-·"'t'""'1""---I~~'""':'---·,~ .. ~··"":'-_·-~,·~ 50 60 -+ 38 ...;, A + ... ~.·r { >."s hortugal 36 .r···Xi -+ I r'" I"::'·· ····.. ,i..·' " ,, 1\ \ 34 \ ... N I Himalayan MIS -0­ 32 ./ ~ 30 ... ... , , 22 , , " , , Ras ARABIAN seA AI Junayz Key: Integration Era Sites. Othe r Important Sites @ 10" 11111 200 300 400 Major Tradel Exchange Routes Kilometers 18 FIG. 1. - Major Sites of the Indus Tradition. .. " t' ( I I for interpreting economic and social organiza­ ORNAMENTS IN MODERN ! tion (5). Another approach to building interpretative AND TRADITIONAL SOCIETIES I models regarding the role of specific ornaments in the prehistoric period is through the critical analysis of ancient texts and folk traditions of South Asia. Before attempting to understand the role of orna­ ments in ancient societies it is important to establish I In this .paper I will first present a -general a framework of study and identify biases that can methodology for the study of Indus ornaments and distort our research methods and interpretations. In then focus on. specific examples of bangles and modern, Euro-American and industrialized societies, beads to illustrate how these neglected artifacts can with the exception of wedding rings, most body or­ l provide a meaningful insight into the society of the f naments are regarded as non-utilitarian and essen­ ancient Indus Valley Tradition. tially optional forms of adornJllent. Although I ornaments are worn, in most communities, heavily adorned individuals, either male or female are usu­ ally associated with ostentatious displays of status, I CHRONOLOGICAL BACKGROUND wealth, sexuality or fantasy. Such displays are quite '. acceptable in coronation ceremonies or at festivals such as Mardi Gras or Halloween, but are not en­ couraged as an everyday phenomenon. --1 i. The term Indus Valley Tradition refers to the long series of cultural developments taking place from Furthermore, in modern industrial societies, around 6500 B.C. to approximately 1500 B.C., in finished ornaments usually are purchased from a the areas of modern Pakistan, northwestern India and store that is far removed from the actual mariufac.. parts of Afghanistan (6). The roots of this tradition ture. While different qualities and styles of objects can be traced to the beginning in the Neolithic period may be used to represent general social status and (6500 B.C.) in sites such as Mehrgarh. Specific or­ ethnic affiliation, most ornaments no longer have nament styles recovered from the Neolithic and early any specific social or ritual significance. Even when Chalcolithic levels at Mehrgarh appear to have pro­ ornaments do have ritual significance, usually it is vided the basis for the Early Harappan and Harappan derived from the use of specific symbols and not ornament styles found at sites such as Nausharo, from the manufacture or raw material. In our modern Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Chanhu-daro, etc.. society, most people cannot differentiate amber, ivory or gem stones from imitations made in glass Early Harappan is the term usually associated or plastic. One reason for this is that it really doesn't with the formative phase of the Harappan or Indus matter, since few people wear these materials .for Civilization which is dated from 3500­ their magical or ritual properties. 2600 B.C. (7). The Harappan Phase is now dated from approximately 2600 to 1900 B.C. and is In contrast, many of the ornaments worn in pre­ characterized by a fully developed urban civilization industrial or traditional communities throughout the that extended over an area that was twice the size world are worn for specific social and ritual pur­ of contemporaneous civilizations in Mesopotamia or poses. Traditional Native American ornaments, the Egypt (8). The Indus Valley Tradition continues ornaments of the Pacific Islanders, and in many com­ through the Late Harappan period (as late as 1500 munities of South Asia, continue to retain specific to 1000 B.C.) and overlaps with the cultural social and ritual significance. Consequently, the developments that coincide with the Vedic period in manufacture, trade and use of ornaments are expli­ the northern subcontinent (9). citly or implicitly prescribed. Ornaments are made from specific types of raw materials and they have Whereas in the past scholars assumed that there standardized shapes and colors. Furthermore, the was a major "Dark Age" between the Indus Civili­ technology and season of manufacture are often zation and the Early Historic period in the northern regulated and in some cases, only specific individu­ subcontinent, current research is showing that there als are allowed to manufacture, trade and wear cer­ are in fact numerous continuities (10). When prop­ tain ornaments. erly demonstrated, these· continuities can serve to 1 The recognition of these culturally defined strengthen the reliability of inferences about the processes by most members of the society provides Indus Civilization (11). a greater sense of meaning and significance to the use of specific raw materials, the technology of pro­ duction, and eventually the use of specific orna­ (5) KENOYER,
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